Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by falcolas 1539 days ago
> What is your preferred alternative?

How about the way most of the rest of the civilized world handles it?

Termination must have a cause, be backed up with documentation, and ideally display the company's attempts at remediation (i.e. the PIP).

5 comments

This makes termination more expensive. That adds a risk to every new hire. Which slightly depresses the totally amount of hiring. Or so the argument would go.
> That adds a risk to every new hire

Which is why many countries which have this allow for few months of probation (three months in Czechia) at the start of employment, where either employee or employer can call it off at any time. There are processes by which an employer can fire an employee after this period (failed performance improvement period, and often severance) or where an employee can leave (resignation effective after a contractually required notice period, or earlier on mutual agreement).

It would take a particular sort of person and probably a special contract for a situation where someone is able to resist being fired for an extended period of time. Most people aren't quite motivated or shameless enough to keep that up for long - it's probably the same sort of effort as actually doing the job.

And yet, it works just fine in reality. That hypothetical argument is pure speculation, used to justify a law that's used to mask firing for illegal reasons and threatening employees.

Termination for most companies is expensive. It's why so many US companies still have and use PIPs. They're up against a threat of losing a lot of money, and if they can remediate the employee (it happens a fair bit, I've found), they've saved that money.

To paraphrase a rather decent well and septic guy on TikTok, "I've just put tens of thousands of dollars into this guy's education. Why would I get rid of him?"

> it works just fine in reality

There are multiple equilibria. At-will favors agility.

On the other end of the spectrum we find economies where most of the workforce is informally or short-term employed and where new-firm formation is limited by employers' aversion to hiring and senior employees' reluctance to leave cushy jobs from which it is nigh-impossible to be fired.

> paraphrase a rather decent well and septic guy on TikTok

They are quoting Lee Iacocca.

> agility

Potential agility at the expense of eroding an employees rights and upsetting their equilibrium. IMO - not worth it.

> On the other end of the spectrum we find

Which is not a symptom of requiring a reason for firing someone, it's a symptom of the employer making people irreplacable.

Something that happens today even at-will workplaces.

We can compare against public sector employees.

I think we can see a difference.

It’s not that we don’t end up with “corruption” with at will policies, but it’s better for the economy to have a more dynamic workforce.

As an individual though, of course I’d like to have a guaranteed job, but… I mean then you get government performance.

Yes some people will excel despite the lack of incentive, but most will prefer to just be mediocre and get by —why not? You won’t get in trouble.

Public sector employees tend towards mediocre because the compensation is awful. The only way to attract anybody at all who doesn't entirely suck is to offer some other less tangible perk, like job security.
Not all public sector jobs pay poorly.

However, there is a dynamic where good performance by employee A is frowned upon by the majority of other employees because that will expose their mediocrity. It’s a complaint I’ve heard from a couple of people who’ve worked in the public sector.

> Termination must have a cause, be backed up with documentation, and ideally display the company's attempts at remediation (i.e. the PIP).

In my experience that's exactly how it works already. It's expensive to fire an employee. If I wanted to let someone go, HR would make me prove it was necessary and require the VP to sign off on it. And if the employee in question is known to be a member of a protected class (the biggest one being anyone middle aged or above) and they even speculate about the possibilities of legal action, good luck firing them at all, justified or not.

Not for everybody. Quite specifically, not for the person in TFA.
Which is also how the vast majority of companies in the US, even in At Will states, do it as well with rare exceptions

Mass layoffs often are treated differently but then they come under different laws as well.

but a normal single employee termination, I have never worked for a company that did not have a Performance Improvement Plan process to terminate poor performance

I agree. Which is why I'm advocating for codifying it; especially when the exceptions are using at-will to attack or threaten their employes.
The problem with that is often times "codifying" things with government regulations ends with several orders of magnitude of unintended consequences that often do not improve the lives of the people you are targeting while at the same time making the lives of everyone that do not have the problem today worse by creating similar or other problems for them
Could this happen? Yes. Would it happen? Highly unlikely. Not for something as simple as changing the laws to require a reason and evidence to fire someone.

Now then, a more likely complication would be riders. But that's not a side effect of codifying employment termination requirements, that's a side effect of shitty legislators.

And that? We have some control over that.

And again, we're not talking about some new legislation with no prior art. It's how it was before the at-will laws came into play, it's how it still is in some states, it's how a large number of companies work today and it's how it is in a majority of other developed nations.

The problem here is you state clearly that a "clean bill" would be impossible yet you want to argue the issue like a clean bill was possible.

Sorry reality does not work that way, any attempts to change the law would have massive side effects because the "riders" as you call them would be added, the bill would not be a 10 page ensure employers go through a PIP, no it would be a 1000 page grab bag of special interest back room deals

even companies in at will states will often do a full pip process (can be more than a year) to exit a lower performer.

I've seen quite a few people exited by malicious managers who documented things in a PIP that didn't happen, and set rules for PIP exit that weren't attainable. All to avoid a lawsuit when a person is terminated.

Not sure that's highly functional.

And if you have been there for multiple years, with plenty of severance; at least one month per year of service IMO.